Wool

Published June 9, 2013 by Century.

ISBN:
978-1-78089-124-8
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4 stars (16 reviews)

5 editions

Gripping story, excellent world-building

5 stars

A real page-turner and full of twists. It does feel like it's getting long after the halfway mark (like watching Lost), which could be expected after reading the author's post summary describing how he published the first few chapters as a novelette before getting unexpected attention and then expanding it into a book (and now a trilogy). This is also a real inspiration for those who self-publish. Anyway, the world-building is amazing, and I'm glad I started reading this after watching the TV pilot so I didn't spoil the book (it's one or the other). Now onto the second book.

Entertaining, but mediocre and ultimately disappointing

3 stars

Content warning SPOILERS!

Hard to forget

4 stars

I read Wool during a time when I needed an escape and Wool delivered. I still have the terrain of the world mapped in my brain. Like many dystopian novels, some of the writing and character dev style is not to my taste and may not have aged well. But worthwhile to explore the world building.

Incredible, just don't get attached to anyone!

5 stars

An impressive piece of world building and a thrilling ride throughout. Dystopian sci-fi realised with engaging characters and a pace that keeps you coming back. Difficult to say more without spoilers, but it's most excellent.

Review of 'Wool' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

In a ruined and hostile landscape, in a future few have been unlucky enough to survive, a community exists in a giant underground silo. Inside, men and women live an enclosed life full of rules and regulations, of secrets and lies. To live, you must follow the rules. But some don’t. These are the dangerous ones; these are the people who dare to hope and dream, and who infect others with their optimism. Their punishment is simple and deadly. They are allowed outside. Jules is one of these people. She may well be the last

Hugh Howey’s independently released smash hit series Wool has been picked up and released as a novel. While Wool is more of an omnibus of the first five novellas, Simon and Schuster (in the US) and Random house here have been promoting it as a novel. While each novella does shift perspective, the questions at …

Review of 'Wool' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Whatever you do, don’t say you want to go outside. Holsten is the sheriff of a silo; an underground city keeping its inhabitants safe from the inhospitable outside world. Those living up top see the barren landscape only through the surveillance cameras which can only be cleaned when the worst happens. When someone is sent outside. No one ever fails to clean the cameras, not even Holsten’s wife who he lost years before.

This edition of Wool is really five separate novellas bundled as an omnibus. The first three books serve as tableaus in the lives of three very different inhabitants. Part One: Holsten follows the sheriff as he discovers more about what happened with his wife. Part Two: Casting Off plunges into the depths of the silo as the mayor and her deputy sheriff take the long journey down to maintenance at the bottom of the silo. Part Three: …

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